Your English writing platform
Discover Ludwig"too much heavy" is not grammatically correct in written English.
If you want to use "too much" in a sentence, you should use it as an adjective followed by a noun or noun phrase. For example: "There is too much traffic on this road."
Exact(16)
But hey, too much heavy thinking going on here and not enough drinking.
Gnocchi alla Bolognese was a sea of thick red sauce crowded with too much heavy, albeit house-made, potato pasta.
There is much too much plot in any case, and a little too much heavy weaponry for my taste.
He claimed that Iran was breaking its agreement by "spinning too many centrifuges, having too much heavy water".
If your trip has already included too much heavy food or too many late nights, this place provides a instant pick-me-up.
Dangerfield's explosiveness and goal sense would, of course, be an asset to anyone but he seems a perfect fit at Geelong where Joel Selwood has been forced to do too much heavy lifting in recent seasons.
Similar(44)
Even more remarkably, the firm seems to have achieved this without too much heavy-handed paternalism.
Guy Joosten's production evokes the look of Renaissance Italy, though with surreal touches and too much heavy-handed imagery of eternal love amid the starry cosmos.
But then fast bowling is just one of the great sporting extremes, a captivating fast‑twitch discipline of rhythm and flex and gymnastic skill that can shrink with too much heavy-handed tinkering.
I eliminate clauses that are superfluous and sound too much like heavy music for a movie soundtrack.
Don't use it throughout the whole song, or it will sound too much like heavy metal.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com